School Library Journal Review
Gr 4--6--The first of Ogle's new trilogy introduces three unlikely heroes-in-the-making tasked with saving their town of East Emerson, MA, from destruction. Versatile Timothy Andrés Pabon distinctly animates the print into aural mirth. Pabon is earnest as Will, who's been uprooted from Brooklyn by his Latinx mother after his white father left. Pabon turns feisty as Korean American athlete Ivy, the older of two transracial adoptee siblings across the street. He becomes deadpan formal as Ivy's younger genius brother, Linus, who is Black. Only Will and Ivy can see the monsters--werewolves and wraiths, sure, but also wekufes, a wany d and Abenaki Wa-won-dee-a-megw; "man of science" Linus doesn't yet believe. Pabon's also memorable as MIT PhD-ed witch Oracle Jones, but his ovation-deserving performance belongs to snarky storyteller Adam Monster, whose definition of melancholy induces Pabon to weep hysterical tears. VERDICT Pabon exuberantly transforms this not-quite-frightfest into a fabulous funshow.
Publisher's Weekly Review
Following his parents' divorce, 12-year-old Guillermo "Will" Hunter moves with his Latinx mother from Brooklyn to the tiny island town of East Emerson, Mass., which he swiftly discovers is inhabited by all manner of myths, monsters, and magical creatures that only he can see, including librarian lamias and mummy history teachers. Happily, he soon befriends a couple of classmates: energetic, athletic Korean American Ivy, who can view the monsters using an enchanted ring, and her Black adopted brother, bookish Linus, who's unaware of the beings. As the pets of the town, including Will's dog, begin to disappear, the tween encounters a prophecy: "Find the animals, destroy the crown. Save the animals, and save the town." Now he and his new friends must figure out how to thwart an ancient evil. Narrated by an unseen Adam Monster with an alliterative, wry voice, this tongue-in-cheek adventure scatters beginner-level secret messages and puzzles--sometimes engaging, sometimes distracting--throughout the text as Ogle's (Punching Bag) intrepid heroes unravel the secrets of their monster-infested home. A lively tale mixing humor, horror, and heart. Ages 8--12. Agent: Brent Taylor, Triada US. (Feb.)